Erythropoietin boosts brainpower

July 8, 2009

Healthy young mice treated with erythropoietin show lasting improved performance in learning and other higher brain functions. Researchers writing in the open access journal BMC Biology tested the cognitive effects of the growth factor, finding that it improved the sequential learning and memory components of a complex long-term cognitive task.

Hannelore Ehrenreich led a team of researchers from the Max Planck Institute of Experimental Medicine in Göttingen, Germany, who studied the . She said, "Erythropoietin has been in clinical use for over 20 years to treat patients with anemic conditions, ranging from renal failure to cancer. It has recently received attention for its apparent ability to improve cognitive function in people with schizophrenia and multiple sclerosis. Here, we sought to investigate erythropoietin's effects in healthy mice".

Ehrenreich and her colleagues tested the effects of erythropoietin on the ability of the mice to learn how to exploit an experimental set-up to receive sugared water. Over a series of learning stages, the mice were trained to get their treat by poking their noses into holes lit by LEDs, rather than into unlit holes, within a time limit. The mice that had been treated with recombinant human erythropoietin were significantly more likely to master the task than those that had not. According to Ehrenreich, "Treated mice showed superior performance in associative, operant and discriminant as well as in the initial training phases. Moreover, erythropoietin-treated mice demonstrated better task adaptation and higher performance stability".

The researchers conclude, "Further untangling of molecular mechanisms of erythropoietin action on higher cognitive functions may ultimately open new avenues for prevention strategies and therapeutic interventions in neuropsychiatric diseases".

More information: Erythropoietin improves operant conditioning and stability of cognitive performance in mice, Ahmed El-Kordi, Konstantin Radyushkin and Hannelore Ehrenreich, BMC Biology, http://www.biomedc … com/bmcbiol/

Source: BioMed Central (news : web)

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Birger
Jul 09, 2009

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If the substance does not interact with too many of the medicines used by the elderly, it should be tested for its ability to restore some of the cognitive functions that decline in the elderly, both as a normal result of ageing and as a result of strokes, vascular dementia or other age-related diseases.
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